“A SHOCKING REVELATION: A SOLDIER’S FAMILY MAY HAVE JUST TURNED THE ENTIRE INVESTIGATION UPSIDE DOWN.”

The United States is still mourning after six service members lost their lives in the strike at Port Shuaiba, Kuwait. Among them was 20-year-old Sgt. Declan J. Coady, remembered by those who knew him as a brave young soldier with a promising future. For days, the tragedy was believed to be the result of a sudden drone strike. But a new statement from Coady’s family is now raising serious questions.

According to the family, there may have been a critical warning issued before the attack—one that, for reasons still unclear, never reached the front lines. The claim is now fueling intense public discussion and renewed scrutiny over what really happened that night. And as more details slowly begin to surface, one unsettling question remains: was this tragedy truly unavoidable, or is there a missing piece of the story still waiting to be revealed?

US soldiers who died in the Iran war remembered for their service and devotion to their families

The family of fallen soldier Sgt. Declan J. Coady has released a statement following his death at Shuaiba port in Kuwait, calling him “a rock in all of our lives” and “the most amazing brother and son my family could have asked for.”

Coady was among six American troops killed in the opening hours of the war with Iran. All soldiers were assigned to the 103rd Sustainment Command, an Army Reserve unit based in Des Moines, Iowa.

“On Sunday, March 1, after trying to check in, we heard nothing. Trying to be positive we all assumed he was just in a situation where he couldn’t message back, but we all knew something was wrong,” Declan Coady’s sister, Keira, said in the statement. “At 8 p.m. as we all were getting ready to go to bed, the doorbell rang, and the rest of that night will forever be one of the worst nights of our lives. While it’s all blurry, we all knew what the doorbell meant.”

Coady, along with five other American soldiers, died in the same attack at Shuaiba port in Kuwait, a commercial harbor that doubles as a logistics hub through which the U.S. military ships tactical vehicles and supplies into the region.

“As his older sister, I can’t quite comprehend it even now, but the only thing I can think is that I wish I had called him one more time and told him I loved him,” Keira said. “I wish that I had been able to be there or trade places with him or anything just so he could have known he was safe and that we loved him and he didn’t need to be scare. … He was supposed to be 21 on May 5. He was just a baby.”

PHOTO: Sgt. Declan Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, Iowa poses in an undated photograph

U.S. Army Reserve Sgt. Declan Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, Iowa poses in an undated photograph in his uniform. Coady was killed March 1, 2026, at the Port of Shuaiba, Kuwait during a drone attack.
U.S. Army Reserve/via Reuters

Keira said that he died on the way to the hospital after sustaining injuries in the attack. Coady, who was posthumously promoted from specialist, enlisted in the Army in 2023.

“It’s hard to say anything because those that don’t know him will just know him as another person that died in combat and their lives will go on,” Keira said. “However, for my family, my parents lost a son, and me and my siblings lost a brother.”

Keira said she tried calling him when she found out, hoping that it was all “an awful dream and maybe I would hear his voice telling us he was safe.”

“But there was nothing, not even a voicemail,” she said.

“I wish I could think of words beyond that he was smart and kind and amazing, but even if I were to throw in other words it still wouldn’t quite capture his spirit,” Keira said. “He was truly a rock in all of our lives and was just the most amazing brother and son my family could have asked for.”